This paper presents a unified concept of the CORE Model (Collective Organisational Reciprocal Engagement) together with its two staff-facing arms, the ECHO Process (Embedded Collective Healing Organisation) and the REALM Practice. CORE proposes that organisations working in sustained contact with trauma should replace the conventional bifurcated support architecture, which casts staff as psychologically intact helpers and service users as the trauma-affected recipients, with a unified, dual-layer structure in which staff simultaneously facilitate and participate in psychosocial supports across both populations. Drawing on Adverse Childhood Experiences research, interpersonal neurobiology, polyvagal theory, experiential learning theory, the helper therapy principle, and the clinical concept of parallel process, the paper argues that this bifurcation is empirically questionable and structurally limiting, since both populations are statistically likely to include significant trauma histories and emotional regulation is a learned relational capacity that many adults were never deliberately taught. If CORE is the heart of the model, the organisation’s care for its own staff made structural, then ECHO and REALM are the two arms through which that care reaches staff and holds them in a supportive embrace. The wager is that staff who are helped to stay regulated within the trauma-informed environment will, in turn, help regulate everyone around them through what the paper calls the relational field, the web of co-regulating relationships that connects staff to one another and to those they serve. ECHO embeds the teaching and practice of self-regulation and co-regulation in the ordinary working week through experiential, voluntary, symbolic and reciprocal practices, so that regulation, once learned, reverberates along that field. REALM is its flagship practice: a year-long sequence of symbolic-somatic sessions structured as a regulation curriculum that never announces itself as one. Although the framework was developed in a high-trauma reception setting, its starting conditions, stressed and under-supported staff carrying far more than their roles formally acknowledge, are now close to general across the workforce, which widens its relevance well beyond organisations that work directly with trauma. The paper sets out CORE’s design principles and its Activity Spectrum, ECHO’s proposed transmission mechanisms and its resolution of the self-care paradox, the experiential pedagogy through which regulation is taught rather than described, the reciprocal structure through which every participant both gives and receives, and the practice expressions developed at Carnbeg Centre, Ireland. It is careful to hold any reciprocal healing as a welcome byproduct that the organisation must protect, never a task staff are set. It closes by naming the framework’s ethical risks and failure conditions and by proposing a practice-based doctoral agenda to test its claims. All support offered here is practice-based observation; the claims are advanced as hypotheses precise enough to be refuted, which is the appropriate posture for a concept paper
Sean Patrick Conroy (Thu,) studied this question.